The Case of an Endometrial Cancer Patient with Breast Cancer Who Has Achieved Long-Term Survival via Letrozole Monotherapy.
Masako IshikawaKentaro NakayamaSultana RaziaHitomi YamashitaTomoka IshibashiHikaru HaragaKosuke KannoNoriyoshi IshikawaSatoru KyoPublished in: Current issues in molecular biology (2023)
Herein, we present the successful treatment of a 92-year-old woman who experienced recurrent EC in the vaginal stump and para-aortic lymph nodes. The patient was first treated with paclitaxel and carboplatin for recurrent EC, which was abandoned after two cycles of chemotherapy because of G4 hematologic toxicity. Later, the patient was treated with letrozole for early-stage breast cancer, which was diagnosed simultaneously with EC recurrence. After four months of hormonal therapy, a partial response was observed not only in the lesions in the breast, but also those in the vaginal stump and para-aortic lymph nodes. She had no recurrence of breast cancer or EC, even after six years of treatment with letrozole-based hormonal therapy. Subsequent whole-exome sequencing using the genomic DNA isolated from the surgical specimen in the uterine tumor identified several genetic variants, including actionable mutations, such as CTNNB1 (p.S37F), PIK3R1 (p.M582Is_10), and TP53 c.375 + 5G>T. These data suggest that the efficacy of letrozole is mediated by blocking the mammalian target of the rapamycin pathway. The findings of this study, substantiated via genetic analysis, suggest the possibility of long-term disease-free survival, even in elderly patients with recurrent EC, which was thought to be difficult to cure completely.
Keyphrases
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- lymph node
- free survival
- endometrial cancer
- early stage
- case report
- early breast cancer
- aortic valve
- insulin resistance
- left ventricular
- type diabetes
- sentinel lymph node
- pulmonary artery
- stem cells
- randomized controlled trial
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- heart failure
- copy number
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- big data
- skeletal muscle
- replacement therapy
- pulmonary hypertension
- electronic health record
- metabolic syndrome
- newly diagnosed
- adipose tissue
- cell therapy
- rectal cancer
- young adults